Judges 4:1-24 · Deborah
A Courageous Leader
Judges 4:1-7
Sermon
by King Duncan & Angela Akers
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I’m sure most of you have served in a leadership position at some time in your life. I think you’ll agree with me that leadership is hard for many reasons. But one of the biggest stressors for leaders is always being in the public eye. Which means your mistakes are public too. And all of us have had those moments where we wish our brain and our mouth had been working as a team.

I heard an old joke about a politician who was out campaigning when a journalist pushed a microphone in his face and asked, “Are you going to join the fight against malaria?”

“Why?” the politician asked. “What have those malarians done now?”

There is an organization in England called the Plain English Campaign that was founded to remove “gobbledygook, jargon and misleading information” from public communications, such as political speeches and advertisements. Every few years, they announce their Foot in Mouth awards for public figures, especially politicians, who have questionable communication skills.

Boris Johnson, the former Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, has won the Foot in Mouth award twice. In 2016, he won for this unfortunate statement: “Brexit means Brexit and we’re going to make a Titanic success of it.” I would have trouble trusting a leader who uses the Titanic as a symbol of success.

Senator Mitt Romney won the 2012 Foot in Mouth Award for the following patriotic quote: “I believe in an America where millions of Americans believe in an America that's the America millions of Americans believe in. That's the America I love.” Although it wasn’t chosen for an award, the editors at the Plain English Campaign highlighted another of Senator Romney’s quotes on their website: “I'm not familiar precisely with what I said, but I'll stand by what I said, whatever it was.” (1)

We have all made a mistake like that, so we can’t be too hard on them. But good leaders need to be effective communicators. That’s an essential skill for inspiring confidence in your followers. 

Ken Downer is a former Army Colonel and a leadership coach. In one of his articles, he highlights what he calls “crutch phrases,” common phrases that leaders use that weaken their communication.

The first crutch phrase that Downer says leaders should never use is “To be honest . . .” When a leader uses this phrase or some variation of it, it signals that the rest of the time they are being dishonest.

The second crutch phrase is similar to the first: “Trust me.” If you have proven yourself to be a trustworthy leader, you don’t have to bring it up. Just saying these two words implies that your team may have reasons to distrust you.

And the final crutch phrase is, “No disrespect intended,” or a variation on it—“No offense, but . . .,” “Don’t take this wrong, but . . .” It’s a way of saying, “I’m going to tell you something you don’t want to hear, but I don’t want you to react to it.”

Downer ends his article with this good advice: “Let’s let our words stand on their own merit.  And to strengthen those words, let’s make sure that our actions back them up every time.  If we do that, we won’t have to ask for their trust.  It will already be there.” (2)

Those sound like the words of a seasoned leader. Let our words stand on their own merit. Make sure our actions back them up every time. We see both those principles at work in the leadership of Deborah, one of the judges who led Israel during a very difficult time in their history.

The editors of The Jesus Bible describe the whole book of Judges in this way: “The Book of Judges demonstrates God’s continued faithfulness to His persistently wayward people.” (3)

In Judges 4, the people of Israel once again rebelled against the Lord and did evil in God’s sight, so God put them under the power of Jabin, king of Canaan, and his army commander, Sisera. Sisera had a powerful and well-equipped army, which he used to “cruelly oppress” the Israelite people for twenty years. Imagine how hopeless and afraid you would be in those circumstances.

But God sent a judge named Deborah to lead the Israelites. She is only mentioned in two chapters of the Bible, Judges 4 and 5. But she is remembered as a prophet, judge and peacemaker, and a courageous leader in troubling times.

Marv Levy, the former coach of the Buffalo Bills, was being interviewed on the radio. The host referred to the Bills’ four consecutive Super Bowl appearances, which all ended in defeat. He asked, “How did you handle the uncertainty of walking onto the field and not knowing the outcome? How did you manage the anxiety?”

Levy answered, “If you’re looking for certainty, you’ve chosen the wrong game.” (4)

You don’t have to read far in the Bible to agree that God doesn’t call His leaders to an easy job. Hebrews 11, the chapter that praises all those ordinary men and women who were chosen to be God’s leaders in uncertain times, begins with the words, “Now faith is confidence in what we hope for and assurance about what we do not see.” Or, as Marv Levy said, “If you’re looking for certainty, you’ve chosen the wrong game.”

Deborah’s first words in Judges 4 exemplify the kind of trustworthy leadership Ken Downer described in his article. She sent for Barak, the military commander of Israel, and said, “The LORD, the God of Israel, commands you: ‘Go, take with you ten thousand men of Naphtali and Zebulun and lead them up to Mount Tabor. I will lead Sisera, the commander of Jabin’s army, with his chariots and his troops to the Kishon River and give him into your hands.’”

As I meditated on this Scripture, it raised an uncomfortable question: In troubling and uncertain times, who do you listen to? In whom do you put your trust? Actress Fran Drescher, star of the TV show The Nanny, is known for her nasal New York accent. She says people often ask if her accent is real, and her only answer is, “Who would make this up?”

Many years ago, her agent advised her to hire a voice coach to eliminate her accent. If she spoke like everyone else, she might get more acting jobs. She was looking forward to her first audition when she could try out her new, accent-less voice.

But just a few seconds into the audition, the producers stopped everything and asked, “What did you do to your voice? We want the real you.” (5)

There are plenty of voices around us trying to shape our reality. Friends, family, colleagues, news sources, social media—they are ready and eager to tell us how to feel about the world around us. The voices we listen to, the people we trust shape how we respond to the world. Do you listen to the voice of courage or fear? Caution or action? 

Deborah listened to and trusted God. In Eugene Peterson’s book A Long Obedience in the Same Direction, he writes, “The central reality for Christians is the personal, unalterable, persevering commitment God makes to us. Perseverance is not the result of our determination; it is the result of God’s faithfulness. We survive in the way of faith not because we have extraordinary stamina but because God is righteous, because God sticks with us.” (6)

That’s the whole message of the Bible, from Genesis to Revelation—the personal, unalterable, persevering commitment God makes to us. When we make God’s faithfulness the central reality of our lives, we don’t listen to the voices of fear. We don’t stay stuck in our anxieties or our past. We walk in faith and live with a sense of empowerment and contagious hope.

All the evidence said that Barak and his army didn’t stand a chance against Sisera and the Canaanites. Yet they did not hesitate when they heard God’s command to ready themselves for battle. They listened to and trusted God. They proved that the central reality of their lives was “the personal, unalterable, persevering commitment God makes to us.” And by trusting in God in uncertain and dangerous circumstances, they defeated Sisera and the Canaanite army. At the end of Judges 5, we read that after the defeat of the Canaanite army, the Israelites lived in peace for the next 40 years.

And that brings us to the central message of Judges 4 and 5: godly leaders frame reality around the faithfulness and promises of God. They may experience fear and failure and doubts and disappointments. But they listen to and act on the faithfulness and promises of God anyway. And God uses their courage and faithfulness to inspire others to faith in God.

Dr. Rebekah Naylor served as a medical missionary in India with the Southern Baptists’ International Mission Board for 35 years. The first day she arrived in Chennai, India, she had no colleagues there. The trains were on strike. Communications technology was limited in the city; it took four hours for her to call the mission agency in Bangalore. That first day in India, Dr. Naylor says she felt alone and afraid.

She began as a surgeon at Bangalore Baptist Hospital and was eventually promoted to chief of medical staff, then administrator and chief superintendent over the hospital. She took every opportunity to share her faith in Jesus in the course of her medical work. Dr. Naylor also taught Bible studies, led chapel services at the hospital, and started a choir.

But she also faced years of trouble and uncertainty while serving in India. She dealt with frequent water and power outages, and rodent and snake infestations. At one point, the Indian government denied the renewal of her medical license. She ended up in court over a labor dispute at the hospital. And for a few years, the Indian government wouldn’t renew her visa, making it difficult to travel home to visit family.

In an interview with the Baptist Press, she admits that there were many times when she wanted to quit her ministry and return to the comforts of home in the U.S. At one point, when her medical visa had been denied and she couldn’t do her job at the hospital, Dr. Naylor did return to the U.S. and interviewed for a position at UT Southwestern. But in the middle of the interview, she had a clear and overwhelming realization that she should return to India. No matter the difficulties, no matter how bleak the future looked, she was certain God had called her there. So she got up, explained she no longer wanted the job, and left.

As she said in the interview with the Baptist Press, “The answer to this lies entirely in the call, in God’s clear direction, about what I was to do. Absolutely there were times that I not only wanted to quit, but I actually thought maybe God was directing me to do so. But as I trusted Him completely with my life and future, He always gave direction . . . I also learned that I was accountable for each day — for the opportunities and responsibilities and work of that day. I did not know what the future was, how long I would be in India, or what was going to happen to my parents in America. I learned just to leave all that with God and remember my daily accountability for what He placed there for me to do.” (7)

When we frame reality around God’s faithfulness and God’s promises, then we can leave our challenges and anxieties and future to God and focus on being accountable for the opportunities and work of that day. We can do what God guides us to do and leave the results in God’s hands.

I want us all to ask ourselves the question this week, “In troubling and uncertain times, who are the voices I listen to? In whom do I place my trust?” Is God’s voice the primary influence in your life? Is God’s faithfulness to you the central reality of your life? What would be different if the central reality of your life was God’s “personal, unalterable, persevering commitment” to you? Your life could serve as a powerful testimony to the truth and goodness of God if you commit to listening to and trusting in the call of God first.    


1. Plain English Campaign UK http://www.plainenglish.co.uk/about-us.html.

2. “Crutch Phrases That Weaken Our Leadership” by Ken Downer, https://www.rapidstartleadership.com/crutch-phrases/.

3. The Jesus Bible (Zondervan: Grand Rapids, MI), 2016, 2018.

4. John Ortberg, God Is Closer than You Think (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 2005).

5. Copyright © 1998 by Alderson Press Corporation. All rights reserved.

6. https://barnabaspiper.com/2018/09/the-best-quotes-from-a-long-obedience-in-the-same-direction-part-2.html.

7. “Rebekah Naylor plans to ‘simply adjust’ after 35-year missions career in India” by Ethan Leyton*, posted April 16, 2009, https://www.baptistpress.com/resource-library/news/rebekah-naylor-plans-to-simply-adjust-after-35-year-missions-career-in-india/. *Name changed for security reasons. Ethan Leyton is an International Mission Board missionary serving in southern Asia as a music and media strategist.

ChristianGlobe Network, Inc., Collected Sermons Fourth Quarter 2023, by King Duncan & Angela Akers